ePoster

TO HANDLE OR NOT TO HANDLE? A PREREGISTERED STUDY ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF CUP HANDLING ON MOUSE BEHAVIOUR

Anjana Madhavanand 4 co-authors

ETH Zurich

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS02-07PM-164

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS02-07PM-164

Poster preview

TO HANDLE OR NOT TO HANDLE? A PREREGISTERED STUDY ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF CUP HANDLING ON MOUSE BEHAVIOUR poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS02-07PM-164

Abstract

Is animal handling a neutral preparatory step in behavioural neuroscience, or an underestimated experimental variable shaping behavioural outcomes? Although tunnel and cup handling are increasingly recommended as refinement strategies, the behavioural consequences of commonly used handling methods remain incompletely characterised across assays. Here, we systematically compared tail and cup handling in mice in a preregistered multi-assay study (Fig.1). We assessed spontaneous approach-avoidance behaviour towards the handler using the voluntary interaction test (VIT), anxiety and exploratory activity in the open field test (OFT) and elevated plus maze (EPM), motivational and affective state in the sucrose splash test (SPL), object interaction and memory in the novel object recognition test (NOR), and sociability in the social interaction test (SIT).


Schematic of the preregistered experimental timeline comparing cup and tail handling in mice. After two weeks of facility acclimatisation with routine tail handling during cage changes, animals were assigned to either a cup-handling protocol or a tail-handling condition. Cup-handled mice underwent repeated cup handling prior to testing, whereas tail-handled mice received no additional handling beyond routine procedures. On testing days, animals were briefly transferred to each behavioural arena using their assigned handling method. Behavioural testing occurred sequentially across days and included the voluntary interaction test (VIT), open field test (OFT) and sucrose splash test (SPL), novel object recognition (NOR), elevated plus maze (EPM), and social interaction test (SIT), followed by tissue dissection.Figure 1: Experimental Design

As expected, cup handling strongly promoted voluntary approach behaviour towards the handler during the VIT. However, handling did not alter anxiety measures in the OFT, self-care behaviour in the SPL, or sociability in the SIT. While standard anxiety measures were largely unaffected in the EPM, handling decreased protected stretch attend postures (PSAP) and increased head dips in the open arms, suggesting increased exploratory drive in anxiogenic environments. Similarly, during NOR, cup handling increased object exploration during both familiarisation and test phases; however, tail-handled animals explored the objects less and failed to acquire a novel object preference. Contrary to expectations of broad anxiolytic effects, we observed subtle shifts in exploratory behaviour to novel stimuli and anxiogenic environments, underscoring routine handling as a critical experimental factor rather than a neutral procedural detail.

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.